Mystic River Cleanup Draws a Crowd

On Saturday, April 25, as part of Mystic Community Earth Day, MyRWA hosted a cleanup at DCR Torbert Macdonald Park in Medford.

Community volunteers, families, neighbors and friends from local businesses like Medford WholeFoods, local schools such as Tufts University and UMass Boston, and local clubs like the Mystic River Rugby Club all gathered together to improve the condition of the meandering paths and waterfront at the park. 

Volunteers collected enough trash to fill two truck loads and enough tree limbs and branches to fill another whole truck. Clothing, milk crates, barrels, and furniture were gathered into piles and garbage bags were filled with wrappers, plastic bottles, aluminum cans, cigarette butts, and more.  

We cannot thank our community enough for helping make Medford a better place to live, eat, work, and play!                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 

"The Tenacity of Water Chestnuts" by Elizabeth Preston

Volunteers at a water chestnut pulling event held by the Mystic River Watershed Association. Photo by David Mussina

On April 22nd, Elizabeth Preston of Hakai Magazine, wrote a beautiful article titled, "The Tenacity of Water Chestnuts." This piece features the problematic invasive species in the Mystic River and beyond known as, water chestnuts (Trapa Natans), an absolute menace of a plant blocking sunlight to life below, reducing oxygen, and clogging waterways.  

Preston herself joined an army of volunteers in the battle against water chestnuts on a sunny midsummer day heaping the invasive plants up into baskets aboard canoes and kayaks. Although the Mystic River Watershed Association (MyRWA) works hard to combat water chestnuts, it is an ongoing battle with a great deal of resistance. 

For the full article by Elizabeth Preston visit: hakaimagazine.com

Looking to get involved? Visit: Water Chestnut Removal Project and sign up to join in on the fight!

Stormwater Awareness Series: "After the Snow"

Stormwater Awareness Series: Session #16

The Town of Arlington Engineering Division is hosting a Stormwater Awareness Series open to residents of the Town of Arlington and the general public.

The series is designed to educate residents on Stormwater and the impacts on runoff, water quality, flood control and prevention, erosion and other stormwater related impacts within the Town of Arlington. Information will be provided by stormwater professionals for the purpose of increasing awareness of these issues within the Town and to provide information for residents to help understand how the surrounding environment affects, and impacts, the local water resources and what can be done to reduce these impacts.

The next presentation is scheduled to be held on April 14th 7:00 – 8:00 p.m. in the Selectmen’s Hearing Room, Arlington Town Hall, 2nd floor. The session will include a presentation “After the Snow” and will provide information for businesses and residents on how to clean up the affects of winter and address stormwater issues and the related impacts. The session will be followed by a question and answer session related to the presentation session topics.

Wayne A. Chouinard, Town of Arlington;  Engineering Division

This presentation will provide an overview of stormwater runoff and information for springtime maintenance tasks to counter the side effects of winter. Sand & salt, freeze & thaw, ice and snow present negative impacts on stormwater runoff and water quality. This presentation will review areas for businesses and residents to consider as the cleanup from the winter begins.

After the Snow

The following is an outline of scheduled presentation:

  1. Overview of Stormwater Runoff

  2. Winter Impact

  3. Performing Inspections

  4. Springtime Cleanup

  5. Maintenance & Repairs

    • Gutters & Downspouts

    • Parking Lots & Driveways

    • Catchbasin, manholes and drywells

    • Grading & Landscaping

Malden River Use Survey

The Mystic River Watershed Association and Friends of the Malden River are conducting a survey on recreational use and property values along the Malden River and would like for you to participate!

Depending on how much you use the Malden River, the survey should take between 10 and15 minutes to complete. Your responses will help us better understand how people are using the Malden River and how they might like to use it in the future. We sincerely appreciate your input and thank you in advance for your participation.

Please take the survey here and share with your friends and colleagues!

"Trashed - No Place For Waste"

"Trashed - No Place for Waste" looks at the risks to the food chain and the environment through pollution of our air, land and sea by waste. The film reveals surprising truths about very immediate and potent dangers to our health, a global conversation from Iceland to Indonesia between the film star Jeremy Irons and scientists, politicians and ordinary individuals whose health and livelihoods have been fundamentally affected by waste pollution. Visually and emotionally the film is both horrific and beautiful: an interplay of human interest and political wake-up call. But it ends on a message of hope: showing how the risks to our survival can easily be averted through sustainable approaches that provide far more employment than the current 'waste industry'. There will also be a presentation by a local community group about recycling and waste in our own community.

This free screening is sponsored by the Medford Film Collaborative, Grace Episcopal Church and the City of Medford Office of Energy and the Environment. The program is funded in part by the Medford Arts Council and the Massachusetts Cultural Council. For more information, go to https://www.facebook.com/medfordfilm

“Trashed” will be screened at the Grace Episcopal Church, 160 High Street Medford, on April 29, 2015 at 6:45PM

April 7th Committee Meeting with presentation by Tufts Univ. WSSS group

From 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. on April 7th, MyRWA will be joined by a group of Tufts University graduate students as part of the Water: Systems, Science and Society program. The students will present on their project surrounding the Malden River. Below is a synopsis:

"The Malden River is heavily polluted due to past industrial activities and current stormwater runoff and outflow from surrounding communities. This pollution has been preventing citizens from fully utilizing the river. In order to understand the complexity of this urban river system and to foster increased public utilization of this resource, this project pursues two different but complementary goals. The first goal is to assist the Mystic River Watershed Association with a public health assessment and risk characterization by collecting data on visitor uses, exposure pathways, potential future uses and perceptions of the Malden River. The second goal is to determine the potential impact of river restoration on property values along the Malden River and to identify the possible economic benefits to the surrounding cities. The project will primarily use interviews to identify current user groups, potential future uses and perceptions of the Malden River, as well as a comprehensive literature review on river restoration of urban waterways and the economic impacts of river restoration."

This special presentation is part of the monthly Mystic River Watershed Association Committee Meeting. After the Tufts presentation the Committee will break into two groups: the Policy Committee and the Clean Water Campaign Committee. Please join us for this free, informational meeting!

Tuesday, April 7th, 7-9:00 p.m.
Tufts University, Lincoln Filene Center, Rabb Room

Special event: Let Justice Roll on Like a River

As part of Earth Month at Grace Church in Medford:

Wednesday, April 15th, 6:45 p.m. (community meal at 6:00 p.m.)
Grace Episcopal Church, 160 High Street | Medford, Massachusetts 02155

 “Let Justice Roll on Like a River” A Presentation about River Stewardship and Access

Russell Cohen, Rivers Advocate at Division of Ecological Restoration/ Riverways Program, Massachusetts Department of Fish and Game

Russ Cohen will address the adverse impact of urbanization – particularly impervious surfaces on water quality and quantity – and provide examples of Best Management Practices being used to mitigate this impact.

Russ Cohen currently serves as the Rivers Advocate for the Massachusetts Department of Fish & Game’s Division of Ecological Restoration.  One of his areas of expertise is in riparian vegetation. He has compiled a list of native plant species suitable for planting in riparian areas; written numerous fact sheets on the ecological and other beneficial functions of naturally vegetated buffers along rivers and streams intended to aid the effective implementation of the Mass. Rivers Protection Act; and (with the Appalachian Mountain Club) prepared Trees, Paddlers and Wildlife, a set of outreach materials intended to raise the awareness of paddlers, riparian land-owners and managers, and others about the ecological benefits of retaining trees and other woody vegetation in and along rivers and streams. 

Cohen has won numerous awards for his rivers work, including: the 2013 Education Award from the New England Wild Flower Society in recognition of both his rivers work and foraging programs; the River Steward Lifetime Achievement Award from the League of Women Voters and Sudbury-Assabet-Concord River Stewardship Council in 2012; a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Association of Massachusetts Wetland Scientists in 2011; an Environmental Merit Award from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in 2003; and the Public Servant of the Year Award from the Environmental League of Massachusetts in 1997.

 

Richard Beinecke, Professor in the Suffolk University Institute for Public Service

Dr. Beinecke will discuss opportunities for public access to the Mystic River, addressing issues many citizens are unaware of – which could use advocacy with “the powers that be” to effect lasting change – including full pedestrian access to/along the river near I-93, part of the Mystic River Master Plan.

Richard Beinecke is a professor in the Suffolk University Institute for Public Service, where he teaches courses on leadership, and U.S. and global health policy and conducts research on management of mental health programs (most recently on the mental health response to the bombings) and leadership (three books on Change Leadership due out May 2015). The author of The Mystic River A Natural and Human History and Recreation Guide, he made over twenty-five presentations on the Mystic during the past two years. He led historic/birding canoe and kayak trips for over thirty years on area rivers (currently on the Mystic River with the Mystic River Watershed Association).  He was a Board member of the Massachusetts Audubon Society for over ten years, and was the “Green Man” leading Concord’s Earth Day festivities for many years. He is an active birder, fisherman, and cyclist.

Mystic River Earth Day Cleanup Scheduled for Saturday, April 25th

Calling all volunteers!

Celebrate Earth Day (April 22) with MyRWA on Saturday, April 25th! Volunteers are needed to help with a park and river cleanup at DCR Torbert MacDonald Park in Medford from 9:00 a.m. to noon. All supplies are provided at this family friendly event. This cleanup is one of many events scheduled as part of Mystic Community Earth Day - for event details and to find an event near you click here.